——————————————————————— EE Ee y Bellefonte, Pa., August 8, 1924. ——————————— BETWEEN ETERNITIES. M. V. Thomas. Beautiful, pure as a lily, Sweet as the breath of heaven; Into the hands of the earth-king An immortal soul is given. Clothed in the garb of affection, Bathed in the dew of tears, Tossed by the billows of circumstance 'Tis borne on the tide of the years. Out of the mystical unknown Of the great eternal past, An immortal soul is drifting On life’s ocean deep and vast. Cheered by smiles of gladness, Led by the iight of hope, Thus, with life's raging elements, Unaided, it must cope. Caught by the tempest of passion, Crushed by the weight of care, Between the two eternities A soul is drifting there. And so through all the ages, Souls are drifting on life's sea Between the great eternities, And even so are we. MORONS. A correspondent asks whether we do not believe that the number of youthful degenerates is decidedly on the increase in America. It is not an easy question to answer. We well re- call a night visit to the great Belle- vue hospital in New York city, as a member of the Mayor's committee, when 27 illegitimate children were born within 24 hours, and the physi- cian in charge informed us that in al- most every case the mother was either physically or mentally subnormal. "This, he averred, explained a great deal of the wrong doing. Itis not flattering to be told, as Dr. L. F. Bar- ker, Prof. of clinical medicine at Johns Hopkins University, recently stated, that “if the public fully real- ized how much insanity, mental defi- ciency, criminality and incapacity for social effectiveness actually exists to- day, a vigorous prophylactic campaign through = education and legislation would be peremptorily demanded.” It is disheartening to be informed that the number of morons (half-wits) is so much greater than most of us have supposed, but there are arguments which seem to substantiate it almost daily. For instance we are told that such degenerates as the rich men’s sons in Chicago, who brutally murder- ed a little boy, are “receiving as many as 400 love letters from silly young girls in a single day.” But the ques- tion as to whether education and leg- islation can cure such a condition is worthy of serious consideration. Over and over again we need to emphasize the fact that the most dangerous peo- ple in the world are the educated scoundrels. The value of an educa- tion depends upon its character; and it is the omission of religious training, the failure to develop the moral sanc- tions, the disposition to minimize spiritual verities, the gross and crass materialism which envelopes so large | a part of our society—it is this which causes so many to outgrow home ties and to show nothing but contempt for those eternal and fundamental things for which our fathers and mothers were taught to give their very lives. Are these degenerates to be regarded as freaks (like 5-legged cows) or as sinners against God and man? What men of science called mental subnor- mality is very often only a lack of moral and spiritual training. We need faith to believe that in the worst of these youthful fools and potential or actual criminals, there is a divine spark which can be kindled into new- ness of life. It is not easy to believe that there is good in everything, but it is those who have faith to believe that who will accomplish the most with mankind. A singer who passed all too soon from these earthly scenes strove to remind us in a beautiful way of this wonderful truth, for it is from his heart as well as with lips that John Kendrick Bangs sang: “I never knew a man so mean He did not have some goodly trait, That by all others would be seen If only they would watch and wait— And that’s the reason why, you know, In condemnation I am slow. I never knew a soul so blind To good, so deeply steeped in sim, That if I searched I could not find Some gold of character within— And that is whay I place no ban On any single fellow man.’ —Reformatory Record. Used Clothes of Movie Stars Much in Demand. Los Angeles.—“You may tear, you may spot the old clothes, if you will— “But the glamour of stardom will cling to them still.” Not confined to Hollywood itself, but scattered throughout this city, are shops where the cast-off garments of the stars of the movies may be pur- chased. Evening gowns, frocks, slippers, kimonos, bathing suits, riding clothes, garden hats, rain coats, desert “get- ups,” all await the purchaser who seeks a Poiret-labeled affair for the price of Main street gingham. Old-clothes men daily make the rounds of the studios and homes of the stars, seeking cast-off clothes. It is a rule that the women of the movies have plenty of beautiful clothes for each picture, and a gown once worn is seldom used again. Hence, the little second-hand clothes shops are filled with the cast-off gar- ments of the reat and minor per- formers of Hollywood. Restless, Naturally. Sweet Young Thing—What makes the boat jump about so? Another 8S. Y. T.—Bob says the poor thing is on a tack.—The Har- vard Lampoon. —It costs from fifty to one hun- dred and fifty thousand dollars to drill an oil well, and by no means is every well an oil producer. : A GOOD MANNERS CLUB. A Milwaukee High school has soly- ed the problem of school discipline in an ingenious way. It has tactfully en- listed the aid of its pupils; not by the honor system which has been found effective in college examinations but by a similar device. The students have been encouraged to form good manners clubs. Boys and girls are naturally “joiners” and the new or- ganization has proved a success. The members are all pledged to conduct themselves in a worthy manner and to assist in improving the conduct and morals of the school. Each wears a button which is subject to recall at any time he fails to live up to his ob- ligations. em SE Some of the offenses listed to be guarded against are: Crowding when classes are moving; gum chewing and the improper disposal of chewing gum (one wonders what would be the proper way to dispose of it); inter- rupting a busy teacher; ignoring waste baskets; “jay walking” on the lawn; injuring plants on the school grounds; talking back to the teacher and marking desks and walls. When the whole list is considered the re- sponsibility for discipline is pretty well shifted from instructors to pupils but the plan is said to work—at least | while it is still a novelty. The club was organized two months ago. Of course the purpose of the new oragnization is not confined to good behavior in the school room; it is much broader than that and appeals to the pupil to be courteous on all oc- casions. For instance, loud talking and “yelling” in cafeterias as well as “eating with unwashed hands” are forbidden. For girls especially there is an injunction against “combing hair and powdering noses in public.” This organization for the promo- tion of good manners could be extend- ed with benefit to other persons be- sides High school pupils. At the same time its rules need not be so specific as those which refer to using a tooth- pick in public. More should be left to the individual's instinct for courtesy. Maybe the quotation from Emerson, | adopted as a motto by the High school club covers the ground: “Manners aim to facilitate life, to get rid of im- pediments. They aid our dealings and conversation as a railway aids travel, by getting rid of all avoidable ob- structions of the road and leaving nothing to be conquered but pure space.”—Ex. LARGEST ELECTRIC ENGINE ON TOUR. The General Electric Co. has built what it claims to be the largest and most powerful electric engine in the world. iv is owned by the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul railroad which is now, with reasonable pride, exhib- iting it throughout the country. This leviathan of the rails is capable of developing 3200 horse power. It will be used to haul transcontinental trains over steep grades in the Cascade mountains. Technical men describe this engine as a “bi-polar, gearless type, requiring ‘neither coal, water nor fuel oil.” It is 76 feet long and weighs 265 tons. On a down grade its motors can be reversed so that it will generate back into the wires much of the electricity taken from them in climbing slopes. The C. M. and St. P. railroad’s 650 miles of track make it the largest electrified system in the world. Six- ty-one electric engines, using current obtained from waterfalls, do the work that once required 163 engines using 2,700,000 tons of coal and 25,000,000 gallons of fuel oil a year. The modern electric locomotive has more power than two big steam loco- motives. This is tested by an exper- iment in which two steam locomotives —among the largest made—and the new electrical giant engaged in a “pushing” .contest. A tug-of-war was not feasible because the couplings would not stand the strain. With cur- rent off, the electric engine was easily pushed down the track by its steam rivals. When the current was turned on the speed slowly slackened, the steam locomotives labored to their ut- most, and finally the electric master drove the two, throttles open, in full retreat.—Ex. A Glowing Star for World War Heroes. An electric star, crowning a tall staff in Madison Square, has been pre- sented to New York city as a tribute to New York men who gave their lives in the world war. It is to be called the “Eternal Light,” because it is to be kept burning for years, perhaps for centuries, to come. Rodman Wanamaker, chairman of the Mayor’s committee on reception to distinguished guests, is the author if the “Eternal Light” idea, and the star is his personal gift. “Many of us are inclined to forget only too quickly,” said Mr. Wana- maker, discussing his gift, “that thousands of our bravest and finest, who had everything to live for, died that we might be happy. How quick- ly fade events that once stirred our blood! This eternal light will make us think, If we are religiously inclin- ed, we’ll breathe a prayer when the soft glow among the tree tops of Madison Square comes within our vision.” The Eternal Light will stand on the south end of the grass plot opposite West 24th street. On clear nights it will be visible up Fifth avenue and down Broadway. The light is a gold star five feet in diameter. It is mounted on a pole 120 feet high, embedded in a granite base inscribed with the names of the world war battles participated in by New York troops. The pole has been fash- ioned from an Oregon pine.—Ex. There is a Happy Land. Kansas has 50,000 more telephones than the whole of South America. And there are people who will discov- er in that fact reason for . envying South America, where there are great open spaces in which the telephone bell never jingles at inopportune mo- ments, A : ——California has made the study of the United States Constitution com- pulsory in all its public schools. Train Indian Boys in Fine Art of Stealing The Stone Hammer society, an er- ganization to teach Hidatsa Indian boys how to steal, is described by Miss Frances Densmore of the Smith- sonian Institution's bureau of Ameri- can ethnology in a study of the music of these little known and almost ex- tinct North Dakota Indians which har Just been announced. While the chief purpose of the society was to train boys in stealth and theft, there were strict regula- tions of the manner in which the stealing was done. The Stone Ham- mer raids took place at night, and it was required that, before sunset, the boys go through camp announcing that they would steal that night. Every- one was fully notified and proceeded to hide their provisions in what they gonsidered the safest places. It was not unusual, Miss Densmore reports, for the Stone Hammer boys to lift the blanket on which an old woman was sleeping, lay the blanket and the old woman gently to one side, and take the dried meat or other food from beneath her bed without waking her. The next night the boys made up packs of gifts for the people who haa been robbed, and it was considered that everything was properly ad- Justed. Builders Unable to Make Wind Scapegoat fhe wind that accommodatingly comes in at the kitchen window on & summer morning and into the library or across the front porch on a sum- mer evening, when the architect has given due consideration to orientation factors in certain locations, becomes a veritable demon when it topples a brick wall or a billboard onto a pe- destrian. And, demon though it is, it is designated an “act of God” in law if the wind were hanging up a record run. This circumstance opens the way to a fertile field of excuses in court cases. The weather bureau of the United States Department of Agriculture was recently called upon to furnish evidence in a court case concerning a wall which went up in the afternoon and down at night; and in the lack of a justifiable windstorm, cross-examiners developed some ein- barrassing facts about the manner of the wall’s construction. Simple Hairdressing While one or two ornamental pins may be stuck into the hair of the Chi- nese or Japanese woman, they are at best only added attractions, and all the work of keeping the complicated coil and elaborate structure firmly in place is done by one pin and one pin only, the Detroit News suys. Qil of camellia, cactus, or some other perfumed lubricant is applied freely while the hair is in process of being combed. This combing, as well as the final arranging, is hardly ever done by the well-born woman herself, but by her waiting maid. The hair is brought to a perfection of black satiny gloss and smoothness, in which a stiffening of gum plays no small part. It is then bourd tightly close to the head with a silk cord, coiled, and the ends tied with silk. It is then twisted into the desired knot and the famous single pin deftly slipped through the center, maintaining the whole. heavy the tresses may be, the ome spoonshaped “pin” does the trick. Capital's Government The government of the Federal City (as President Washington called it until the commissioners gave it his name in 1791) has been since 1874 vested in a commission of three offi- cers, appointed by the president and the senate. They have charge of all municipal and administrative affairs, police, street {improvemenis and schools. Congress is the sole legisla- ture of the city and district, the citi- gens having no suffrage. Since the government owns nearly half the prop- erty in the district, and the city exists largely for the benefit of the officers— legislative, executive and judicial—it has been settled by act of congress that the government pays half the an- nual expenses of the city government, the other being taxed upon the prop- erty of the citizens.—Kansas City Star. Official Headpiece “Halt, there!” commanded Constable Sam T. Slackputter, the well-known guardian of the peace and dignity of Petunia. “Consider yourself under ar- rest for exceeding the speed limit!” “Wha-at!” returned the offending motorist. “How do you know how fast I was going? You didn’t even glance at your watch?” “I don't need to. If I see you com: ing and turn my head away just as you pass the Methodist church corner, and then turn it back and you've reached the hay scales, I know you're exceeding the limit. You may say I can't tell time by my head, but FPve been using it for forty-nine years now, and know just about what it can do.” ~~Kansas City Star. New Street-Car Idea Hope appesred on the horizon of the strap hanger the other day in Detroit in the form of a new type of street car. This car, or rather three-in-one car train, is designed to give greater seating capacity for the same street space than the usual type of cars, It consists of three connecting cars on four, sets of wheels and seats 140 people. The street rallway company also wins, as the three-in-one train weighs less and is cheaper to run than three ordinary type cars. No matter how thick and | White Pine Prominent in American History The white pine has been more im- portant to the commercial develop- ment of America than any other tree, says the American Tree association of Washington, which is compiling a countrywide vote in an endeavor te select a national tree, according to the American Tree association. When the Pilgrims landed the pine was the only green thing to greet them and it became their emblem on the Itis- toric “pine tree shilling” and other coinage. the ax, but Maine still is called the Pine Tree state. History of the white pine until 189¢ is practically the history of the lum- ber industry in America up to that time. The first house built in America of which there is authentic record wars constructed of white pine. White pine is native from Newfound- jand and the northern shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence to southern Man- itoba. It ranges southward through the region of the Great Lakes to north- ern Illinois, northern and eastern Ohio, Pennsylvania and along the Allegheny ' mountains to northern Georgia. Vacation and Profit Gathering Spruce Gum Spruce gummers are now busy in | Northwest forests harvesting a unique crop worth about $100,000. Some spruce gum diggers or pickers who are industrious and real woodsmen bring out gleanings valued at $1,500 for six weeks’ work. To these workers gum gathering is a vacation, living in the open with wild game for food and health building hik- ing in the dense woods seeking the gum deposits, says the New York World. About three-score workers have entered the spruce timber this | season, but several hundred might “easily find rich territory to earn a nice piece of pin money. A canvas pack bag, light ax and a miniature long-handled pickax are the tools needed. The gum nodules are often many feet above the ground, so improvised ladders are fashioned to reach the pockets. Most of the gum, however, is chipped out of the cracks within easy reach. A day's work for a hustler averages twenty-five to thir ty pounds. Old Ring-Off Signal Among the early types of telephone switchboards manufactured by the Western Electric company was the universal board, which made its ap- pearance in 1879. These early boards were rather crude affairs and were soon replaced, | as inventions were made and de- veloped, but they are of interest be- cause of certain important features they contain. The universal board was different from preceding switch- boards in that it enabled the operator not only to connect the subscriber but also to know when the conversa- tion was completed. This was made possible by means of special ring-oft signals which heretofore had not been used. It was soon after the appearance of the universal board that the West- ern Electric company became the headquarters of telephone apparatus and the manufacturing plant of the Bell system. German Students With an increase from 10,265 in 1918 to 22,863 in 1924, the numiber of stu- dents of law in German universities has risen far above that of those study- ing medicine, who numbered 18,121 in 1918, against 12,476 at present, reports the Statistisches Jahrbuch. Theology has lost much popularity, there being only 2,514 Evafgelical students, comi- pared with 8,672 in 1918, and 1,824 Catholic students, against 1,058. Stu- dents of political economy rose from 2,212 to 16,212, and those studying the technique of electricity in the techni- wal colleges increased from 753 to 8,740. Students of historical philology fell from 18,692 to 10,486, and those of mathematical and natural sciences from 7,276 to 8,746. Muarderer’s Doom Papuans, according to Mr. J. H. Holmes’ book, “In Primitive New Guinea,” believe that a man guilty of murder is doomed to an eternal living death in a swamp in the next world “He will strive continually to escape and be everlastingly sucked down again till only the top of his head Is visible. By an extraordinary effort he will struggle upward, only to be sucked back again. His eyes will bulge with pain as he rises and sinks forever and ever. His arms and fin- gers will grow long and gnarled, like the roots of a mangrove tree.” Wood in Disguise Material which seems to be a ver) éoarse stone, used for decorative pur- poses In large public buildings, is really a weod composition, a contractor ex- plained. The wood is ground up and chemically treated, then pressed into strips. When prepared. it looks like stone, and adds decorative value to almost any building. It is deceptive to an uninitiated person, however, to watch a cdrpenter or other workmam saw this “stone” into strips or trim off a corner with a knife, Revenue From Cards Fhe Peruvian government, through the Tax Collecting company, its owa monopoly, reserves the right to import playing cards, according to aa execu- tive decree of February, 1924, A fine of from § to 50 Peruvian pounds is im- posed for [Illegal transportation of playing cards. oo The forests retreated before FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. Do you ask to be the companion of no- bles? Make yourself noble, and you shall be. Do you long for the conversation of the wise? Learn to understand and you shall hear it.—Ruskin. Hat crowns soar higher and higher. The only hat which lacks a very high crown today is the small beretta type, and even this has a notably high up- turned brim. : While the vogue for alligator and snakeskin—often briliantly dyed—is at its height here come silver and gold leathers. The latter are reported to be chiefly for facings. Silk muslin is being used for mid- summer lingerie, and a dainty as well as practical choice it is. In pale shades as blue, lavender and yellow, this dotted soft material is most at- tractively made up into underthings with trimmings of white or black lace. Though the beltless frock of today, | as translated into American styles, is ! straight and slim as a wand, yet it ‘has its mitigations. These come in clever plaitings at the sides, or in a swirl of ruffles. in bathing rub the face gently with : some pure cold cream or white vase- i line. When you return it is easily washed off and the skin is perfectly clear of blemish or burn from the hot ‘rays of the sun. Every one knows the comfortable ‘ feeling which results from a hot bath | after a hard day’s work. That feeling {is enhanced when the bath is made i fragrant by the addition of a muslin ! bag of powdered orris root, about a | tablespoonful in a bag, and a dessert- i spoonful of benzoin, which is a bal- i sam. | The aromatic and perfumed atmos- ! phere that reigns in your bathroom is delicious, soothing and mildly stimu- lating. rather to be chosen than great lands. Jack of all suits is master of none. A fool and his aces are soon parted. _ It’s a long suit that has no return- ing. Take care of the trumps and the tricks will take care of themselves. A little 10-ace is a dangerous thing. Bridge table conversations corrupt good manners. A woman is known by the trumps she keeps. The wages of bridge is debt. The proof of the bidding is in the beating. All honor is not without profit, save in the dummy. An old writer says that “the blue eye is the eye of truth.” Most of us have a weakness for the blue-eyed i have sailors so often blue or blue- gray eyes? They are usually men of open and genial character, so that the old saying seems true in their case! ; But blue eyes must not be too pale; in that case their owners are rather too simple, and if the eyes are re- markably pale they denote selfishness. The dark blue eye is the rarest of ly strong and forcible character. And its owner often has a magnetic charm. Combine such eyes with red gold hair, and you have a beauty of marvelous type and attraction. Brown eyes are most popular, gray eyes most trusting, and really black eyes rare, and not invariably trust- worthy. The eye of most character and originality is found in the curious hazel and in the shade called green. The owners of hazel or green eyes are seldom, if ever, quite ordinary hum- drum folks; red hair accompanies such eyes, and the red haired man or woman is always one to be reckoned ‘with in life. Pongee may be made to look like new, no matter how many times it is washed, if it is washed properly. First it should be rubbed and squeezed gen- sy with the hands in a suds made of luke-warm water and a good white soap. When quite clean, it should be rinsed also in luke-warm water sever- al times and the water squeezed out gently, not wrung out. When per- fectly dry, instead of sprinkling it, rub or squeeze the pongee gently with the hands until it is well crumpled. This removes any hard or deep wrin- kles. Iron then with a very hot iron and your pongee will look as fresh as new. Since this newly decorative spread is always removed at bedtime, all sorts of materials are suitable for its making; and since real effects is now valued as highly in the bedroom as in the more formal rooms, the dainty sprigged chintz of the first venture- some counterpane has given way quickly where possible to daring col- ors and unique design. : More sumptous is the taffeta coun- terpane. Taffeta bedspreads are much in vogue, and for those who have homes on a somewhat elegant scale, there is no better selection. This bed- spread may be simple; when finished the top is the size of the top of the bed; the flounce may be cut in two parts if desired, the under ruffle join- ed above the binding on the inner side of the upper ruffle. The pillow may show an unusual ruffle coming out from under the scalloped edge. The bedroom illustrated has a Chi- nese print counterpane with a green taffeta flounce. The whole room is remarkably beautiful with its oyster gray walls, black furniture, deep piled taupe carpet, green jasper sateen up- overdrapes, and gray Georgette glass curtains edged with corn color. Coral shaded fights and green and gray hooked rugs complete the scheme. Boiled Coffee Frosting.—Mix two cnpfuls of sugar, half a cupful of very strong black coffee, one-eighth of a teasnoonful of cream of tartar, tablespoonfuls of cream and one ta- blespoonful of butter. Boil together without stirring to 240 degrees, or the soft ball stage, remove from the fire and add a few drops. of vanilla extract. Cool until tepid and beat steadily until thick enough to spread. FARM NOTES. —In 1920 Pennsylvania had 3,632 pure bred horses, 81,290 pure bred cattle, 15,781 pure bred sheep, and 34,775 pure bred swine on the farms. —Tests of weed killers, to deter- mine whether they measure up to the claims of the manufacturers, will be made by the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture. —About 55,000 individual specimens of Pennsylvania insect life are in the collection of the Bureau of Plant In- dustry. Many of them were found during nursery inspections. —According to the last census, Pennsylvania has more than 6,500,000 bearing apple trees. This is a de- crease of about a million trees below the figures quoted for 1910. —Pennsylvania is the third nurse- ry State in the Nation. It is surpass- ed only by New York and California. There are 264 commercial nurseries on the State’s inspection list, and they cover about 4,000 acres. —If you have any space left in the garden plant some pop corn and navy Before going out into the hot sun or Bridge Maxims.—A good partner is ; ! child or person. By the way, why all eyes; it is the sign of an unusual- ! beans now. Both of these require a long season to reach maturity. White Rice, Golden Queen and Tom Thumb are popular varieties of pop corn. _—Reports indicate that there is likely to be a scarcity of good tobac- co plants in Pennsylvania. Good seed 1s scarce and the stand is none too good in many beds. Growers are urg- ed to take good care of the plants they have. |, —Be sure to hit the apple red bug in the calyx spray. Don’t wait for ; them to arrive. Use one pint of nico- + tine in 100 gallons of dilute summer strength lime sulphur, adding ar- | senate of lead to control the coddling | —Milk from tuberculosis cattle may | spread disease to any animals drink- ling the milk. It should never be fed | without being heated at least to scald- ing temperature, or held at 145 de- grees F. for 30 minutes. To be cer- | tain of safety, it is best as a practical measure, to boil the milk. —To reduce danger of bloatin cattle and sheep should be given 2 good fill of dry feed, particulary roughage, before they are turned on green forage, such as red clover or {alfalfa. If some dry roughage is convenient for them in the pasture . they often correct, of their own aec- cord, tendencies to bloat. Dew and rain increase the danger of bloating. | —Now is the time to plan for soiling crops to help out when pas- tures get short next summer. Oats and peas will thrive, give good yields and make a good crop for soiling purposes. Any surplus makes an ex- i cellent quality of hay. A field of {corn convenient to the barn or pas- i ture will be found useful for green feed for the dairy herd for late sum- mer. Stowells Evergreen Sweet is a good variety for this purpose. —Thorough washing of the milking machine is essential in the production of clean milk. All parts of the ma- chine coming in contact with milk should be sterilized with steam or boil- ing water every day. An ordinary wash boiler can be used to good ad- vantage. The parts are placed in the boiler with the lid on and the water heated to 190 degrees. The boiler is then removed from the stove and the parts left in the water until the next milking. —The soy bean is a friend in need . where clover will not catch and hu- ‘mus is required before successful farming can be carried on. Soy bean hay is high in protein, and has as high carbohydrate and higher fat content than alfalfa. It is palatable. Cattle and sheep like it as forage hay, or in a silage combination with corn. The soy bean plants are nitrogen-gather- ers, and when a growth of this crop is turned under the next year’s corn crop will be as great as on clover land. ; About one peck will seed an acre on | well-inoculated soil, and a wonderful | growth is seen in 10 weeks. Seed ma- : tures in 90 to 100 days. i —Any system of farm management . that does not provide for sufficient i vegetable matter to replace the humus | that is burned and washed out of the soil every year will be unsatisfactory In maintaining the yield of crops. Na- ture unaided by the farm manager, cannot replace the humus so necessary in maintaining plants in seasons of drought. Cover crops, catch crops, pasture crops, use of manure, and other means of increasing the vegeta- ble matter iy the soil will be necessa- ry on most farms. All vegetation cannot be removed from the soil and the humus supply remain sufficient for normal yields. Suitable mechan- ical and the proper physical condi- tions will be imperative for soil main- tenance, to say nothing of soil im- provement. —Fruits and vegetables produced on many Pennsylvania farms are be- ing sold from roadside stands. Nu- merous farmers will use this method of marketing for the first time. The Bureau of Markets of the State De- partment of Agriculture offers the following suggestions based on the experience of others: Such a business can only be devel- oped successfully through satisfied customers. Graded products, attract- ively packed and displayed, are the foundation on which a permanent bus- iness must be built. Most of the suc- cessful roadside stands have acquired customers through the recommenda- tion of patrons who had been satis- fied with previous purchases. Prices should be set somewhere be- tween the return that the farmer re- i four | er the daily sales, ceives at wholesale and the prices prevailing at stores in near-by towns and cities. Freshness and uniformity holstery, green taffeta window draw of product will do much to bring back curtains with black-grounded figured ' customers, providing prices are rea- sonable. Customers should understand that all of the receipts at a roadside mar- ket are not profits. Aside from the costs of production, returns should at least be suMficient to cover cost of packing and the time of the person who is selling the produce. The larg- the lower the ex- pense of selling per package. The wider the variety of products offered on the stand, the greater will be the inducement to the purchaser to patronize it. More customers mean more sales and therefore more profits to the farmer.